1. Globalisation is having a dramatic effect.doc

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Globalisation is having a dramatic effect - for good or ill - on world economies and on people's lives

Globalisation is having a dramatic effect - for good or ill - on world economies and on people's lives.

Some of the positive impacts are:

·         Inward investment by MNCs helps countries by providing new jobs and skills for local people.

·         MNCs bring wealth / foreign currency to local economies when they buy local resources, products and services - providing resources for education, health and infrastructure.

·         There is far more mixing of people and cultures from all over the world, enabling more sharing of ideas, experiences, and lifestyles. People can experience foods and other products not previously available in their countries.

·         Globalisation can help make people aware of events in far-away parts of the world. For example, people in the UK were quickly aware of the impact of the 2004 Tsunami tidal wave on countries in SE Asia, and were therefore able to send help rapidly.

·         It may help make people more aware of global issues such as deforestation and and global warming - and alert them to the need for sustainable development.

Negative impacts of globalisation

 

However not all people think that globalisation is such a great idea. Critics include many different groups such as environmentalists, anti-poverty campaigners and trade-unionists.

Some of the negative impacts they point to are:

·         Globalisation operates mostly in the interests of the richest countries which continue to dominate world trade, and at the expense of developing countries - whose role in the world market is mostly to provide the North and West with cheap labour and raw materials.

·         There are no guarantees that the wealth from inward investment will benefit the local community. Often, profits are sent back to the MEDC where the MNC is based. Multinational companies, with their massive economies of scale, may drive local companies out of business. If it becomes cheaper to operate in another country the MNC might close down the factory and make local people redundant.

·         Lack of strictly enforced international laws means that MNCs may operate in a way that would not be allowed in an MEDC - for example polluting the environment, running risks with safety or imposing poor working conditions and low wages on local workers.

·         Globalisation is viewed by many as a threat to the world's cultural diversity - drowning out local economies, traditions and languages and re-casting the whole world in the mould of the capitalist North and West. An example is that a Hollywood film is far more likely to be successful worldwide than one made in India or China, which also have thriving film industries.

Anti-globalisation campaigners sometimes try to draw people's attention to these points by demonstrating against the World Trade Organisation, an inter-government organisation which promotes the free-flow of trade around the world.

                           

ALT TAG

 

t is globalisation?

Globalization is the process by which the world is becoming increasingly interconnected as a result of massively increased trade and cultural exchange. It is the result of

1.     technological changes that enable people, goods, money and above all information and ideas to travel the world much faster than ever before, and

2.     the liberalisation of world markets, greatly increasing levels of trade between different parts of the world

Globalisation has been taking place for hundreds of years, but has speeded up enormously over the last half-century. Factors influencing globalisation include:

Communications: TV, telephony and the internet have created a global village. UK businesses can have a call centre in India answering calls from UK customers.

Transport has become cheap and quick. UK people now holiday all over the world, and people from other countries can travel to the UK to seek better-paid jobs. Businesses can more easily ship products and raw materials all over the world - making products and services from all over the globe available to UK customers.

Trade liberalisation: governments around the world have relaxed laws restricting trade and foreign investment, with some governments offering grants and tax incentives to persuade foreign companies to invest in their country. The idea that there should be no restrictions on trade between countries is known as free trade.


Although globalisation probably is helping to create more wealth in developing countries - it is not helping to close the gap between the world's poorest countries and the world's richest.

The animation shows how unequally wealth is distributed around the globe. Click on the income brackets to see where the richest and poorest countries are located.

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